Not convinced one way or the other, yet. The paddock sewing-circle doesn't have a great track record at second guessing what Red Bull engineers get up to in qualifying.
I don't quite get why any of the current 'not-a-KERS' theories mean Seb or Mark couldn't use it on either of their q3 laps. Wished I'd paid more attention to how and when they deployed KERS during Free Practice.
Jacked-up minimum weights and (virtually ballast-less) fixed weight distributions make it hard to see much benefit outside of being able to use small batteries that trickle charge instead of the big ones that need to recharge in a few corners, and get real hot in the process. You still have generators, controllers and motors.
If it is just a battery and motor, no recharge whatsoever ... I dunno that could get risky on restarts* and out of track position/pit-stop periods. Maybe they genuinely don't want the cooling issues (it is Newey), or balance issues in the braking zone, especially with all the off-throttle monkey business they get up to at present.
Completely academic for now, they've got more than enough spare speed to keep themselves out of trouble (well Vettel), but if they do ever have to get past someone in the last race, or other teams figure out v2.0 exhausts, things could get a little sticky for them.
Either way, if it is actually only start-line, then a glorious final two-fingers up to the failed Mosley regime, you gotta love it, engineers making yet more monkeys out of rule-makers, a Kinetic Energy Recovery System that doesn't recover any kinetic energy. Yessssss.
* Yes I know the DRS wont apply right after a SC, and I know Red Bulls get on the power like nobodies business and have traction galore on restarts, but if someone is right-behind burning KERS full-tilt before the start-finish line, they may just be able to keep it close enough to put Red Bull in trouble when DRS zone does re-apply.